work is good! super busy at the vinyl mail order, the label still isn't open yet and I don't know if I'm going to have time to do both. my dude is moving here next month so I'm super excited for that! I would love to see you if you're in the area for a conference! so much to catch up on. I hope you are doing great, lovely.

haha it is pretty depressing sometimes because all my favorite characters die horrible deaths but the plot and the way it's shot is so good. I'm not that much of a fantasy nerd except for GoT & Diablo (the RPG) haha. miss you lady!! wanna skype soon?

The pros of working from home:
- my commute is literally seconds
- it doesn't matter how I dress/if I've washed my hair
- I can drink ALL the tea
- I actually go out for a run in the evening, or do some sort of exercise in the time I would normally commute home

for almost over a year i worked from home - went into the office once in a blue moon but our team was divided across the world and no others in my team were in my actual office. So I said screw it i'm just gonna work from home.

After a month or so of working from home I'd have to go into the office just to get myself on track. It's easy to get distracted. We had a chat room set up where teammates could socialize and talk work stuff and that kept isolation taken care of somewhat. But I'm not sure what kind of work you do - I was in a large IT company (laid off July 2012 - trying to go 1 year without working - been travelling all over the place)

In the late 90s, Algeria was runner up in Fielding's Guide to the World's most dangerous places two or three years running. Something about a fundamentalist rebel faction that controlled all of the country except for the capital city where the monarchy still clung to power. I'd say "take appropriate precautions" but if you're getting along fine in Libya less than a year after a civil war, it would appear you have things under control.